Friday, February 26, 2010

Convergence at Jhalawar

Jhalawar, Feb 18, 2010: The District Collector Mr Krishna Kunal and Superintendant of Police Mr Gorav Srivastava convened a meeting of all district level officers to converse with officials of the Rajasthan Mission on Skills & Livelihoods and project team of IFFDC. While Project Director Dr Rakesh Malhotra alongwith Mr Abhishek and Ms Richa represented RMoL, IFFDC was represented by Project Manager Dr R.P S Yadav and Mr Ramlakhan Gupta, Project Coordinator.

Subsequent to the presentations by RMoL and IFFDC, it was decided that all the departments in the district will liaise with IFFDC in providing contributions of their respective componets (programs) towards rehabilitation of kanjars in the district.

Monday, February 8, 2010

Nothing has changed in the last decade

Migration from Rajasthan after Independence proved to be the undoing of the Kanjar Bhat. With no land to call their own and unable to find jobs which could bring home money, some from the community opted for dacoity. And that damned the community. In the eyes of the police and in the eyes of society. Nobody likes the Kanjar Bhat.

The police added to the myth, painting them as diabolical killers with an ancient signal system to warn and make good their escape. Today, the Kanjar Bhat are thought of as a community whose men have an axe for a weapon, who duck the law by letting out cries which mimic the mongoose and the birds.Still, the police are always in hot pursuit. In the last twelve months, a crackdown on the Kanjar Bhat in and around Yavat has led to more than 50 `surrenders'. Now boys from the community are being roped in as `spotters' to help step up the `surrenders'.

Maybe another 50 men will surface in the coming months. It is good going for the police. But what of the Kanjar Bhat? Will the surrenders get them jobs? Can they return to the mainstream? Nobody knows.

The police say that they have sought help from social organisations like the Association for Attitudinal Healing and policewoman Kiran Bedi's India Vision Foundation, both working with prisoners and their families, for vocational guidance. Some plans for schooling and sheep rearing are also being talked about. But officials admit that unless a concrete rehabilitation programme is chalked out, the surrenders will not mean much.

For full story by Rachna Bhist Rawat, published in The Indian Express, Mumbai on March 18, 1999, please click

Wednesday, February 3, 2010

The debt trap

The baseline survey in kanjar villages (hamlets) of Patan and Gangdhar block in Jhalawar district is now complete. The data reveals a grim situation: 690 households in 18 villages are reeling under a cumulative debt of over Rs 2.5 crore. Even after assigning a correction factor to the data, assuming a high figure gets quoted by respondants for a possible debt relief, the situation with respect to income versus debt remains skewed. The average income:debt ratio in 8 villages of Gangdhar block is 1: 3.3 whereas the ratio is 1: 1.5 in 10 villages of Patan block. For a tribe that is culturally isolated, socially insecure and resource poor, getting out of debt trap is critical for the kanjar to join the mainstream.

The death ritual, called mauser, wherein each household has to make cash contribution is the prime reason for debt accumulation. Another reason for higher debt, in villages of Gangdhar block, has to do with the legal litigation expenses. Since average monthly incomes range from Rs 1,000 to Rs 1,500, repayment rate fails to keep pace with the rate of debt accumulation. The challenge before the project team is to tweak avoidable rituals through behavioural change process as also to develop a financial statement of income-expenditure for selected households for getting a sense of their survival economics. Improving their resource base and developing livelihoods options is crucial to improve their incomes. Enhancing their incomes 3 to 4 fold over the present seems a formidable challenge?